Well...the third night ride of the year (after last's week's IOW jaunt and the recce) for me. Rather flatter (I'll come to The Hill later), rather windier, rather more people of course, and rather wetter (because they were dry). Early enough finish at work to make the 2124 train of choice up to the smoke. A few drips of water on the two-minute ride to the station, but that soon changed. By the time I got to Guildford it looked torrential. A bit lighter when I left Waterloo(gged), but (like everyone else) much of the gear proved unable to cope with the sheer volume of H2O. I have a feeling that the waterproof trousers (which, as so often before, kept the legs dry) channelled water into the boots, which usually are rather more resistant to damp than they were the other night. Having the ankle bands on probably didn't help with that, though I don't know what would in the circumstances...Didn't have spare gloves or socks, hands and feet stayed wet for the duration. Stayed warm at least.
Not sure about the Rotherhithe variation- yes, it was nice to be out of the rain for a few minutes, but as I said to Claud on the night, not the best circumstances to judge whether it was better. First part of the ride was more grin (or not) and bear it...The damp did at least keep the exciting London/Essex nightlife a touch more restrained than usual. And then, the joys of Junction 31. How I have missed it.....A young lady asked if it was a bike race. Somehow resisted the strong temptation to be sarcastic. First stop for me the toilets, to extract at least some of the water from gloves and boots. Simon and a few others did the same. I'd followed Simon's advice about bringing sandwiches and the self-catered option hit the spot (bargaintastic 50p Boots sandwich, bread pudding, and some of the malt loaf). And, as on a certain notorious Brighton ride, once we were soaked for the duration, the rain departed for the second half.
When we got to Horndon on the Hill- wonder if that puncture woke anyone?- I did wonder if that was The Hill. Er, no. Not, IMHO, that bad (that was a relatively little one on the IOW scale), I did have to stop but only because as all too frequently, the Viner's front derailleur was being somewhat recalcitrant and 50x27 didn't strike me as a good idea. 34t ring engaged, I resumed, no walking required. There are worse climbs even in Essex.....
The rest of the ride seemed a bit more straightforward, I think the time even the last of us got into Burnham bore that out (minimisation of faffage and maximisation of rotation as a countermeasure for excess of saturation

). When User10571 got the nod to lead an advance party for the last ten miles or so, I decided to tag along. And despite what looked and felt like a decent turn of speed (barely dropped below 15 mph, much of it at 20 mph) I rapidly fell off the back- not a complaint, the exercise did me good, I should push myself more often, and that's a lot easier when you've got someone to chase! Made it to the Cabin Dairy at 6.45 (!). Excellent breakfast again. Worth the wait, I think. Ummed and aahed about the return options. Extra miles to Wickford didn't appeal that much. At 8am or so, checked the train times. Next one out of Burnham was at 8.20. That'll do. Back into Liverpool St at 9.30 or so, and back to Waterloo (journey 'enlivened' by a twice-undertaking headphone-wearing **** on a Specialized Allez that sounded like a BSO, his chain was making so much noise) in time for the ten o'clock home. Well, it would have been home, except a signal failure meant the train terminated at Havant- cue exit from station with several hundred bods doing headless chicken impressions and straight into a traffic jam. Six miles home took 35 minutes. A quick stint online to buy an SNCF ticket followed by a four-hour nap...
Been taking it easy today. Did clean half a ton of grot off the Viner.......
Thanks everyone. May Felpham be somewhat drier, not least because I have a few extra miles planned.....